Heavy Rain
65°
Morris, IL
Heavy Rain|Forecast »

Devastating disease a growing threat to deer

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(MCT) — GENESEE, Wis. — I spent the morning sitting in a ground blind, bow in hand and fall turkey tag in pocket.

Early fog gave way to drizzle and something else in the air — midges.

The insects flitted in and out of an open window in the blind. The summerlike weather had caused a hatch or rejuvenated insects that had survived earlier frosts.

The midge sighting turned my thoughts to the disease that is emerging as one the top deer stories in the nation this year: epizootic hemorrhagic disease, or EHD.

The disease has been confirmed in at least 15 states this year, including Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa and Michigan.

As reported earlier, EHD is passed to deer by biting midges and causes internal bleeding and fever.

The disease can have significant impacts on local deer populations. In 2011, it killed an estimated 90 percent of white-tailed deer along a 100-mile stretch of the Milk River in Montana.

The disease was confirmed in Wisconsin in 2002, when it killed 14 deer in Iowa County.

But this year’s outbreak is the biggest ever recorded in Wisconsin and several other states.

It has hit the deer herd so hard in parts of South Dakota that wildlife managers there are offering refunds to hunters who purchased deer hunting licenses.

Nebraska officials voted last week to reduce the number of antlerless permits by 20 percent to 50 percent in 18 deer management units.

Michigan wildlife managers report more than 10,400 dead deer from EHD. The disease has killed deer “in substantial numbers” in at least 29 counties in Michigan this summer and fall.

In Wisconsin, EHD is the confirmed or likely cause of death of 345 deer, according to Eric Lobner, wildlife supervisor with the Department of Natural Resources.

The disease has been confirmed in eight counties: Columbia, Dane, Iowa, Jefferson, Marquette, Rock, Sauk and Waukesha.

Lobner said the DNR was not planning any changes to its 2012 deer hunting regulations or permit levels as a result of the EHD outbreak.

“The disease can have local impacts, certainly, but we don’t expect it to have a large enough impact in any deer management unit or region to require any changes,” Lobner said.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all